Bus bulb

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A schematic drawing of a bus bulb.
A schematic drawing of a bus bulb.
Broadway below Canal Street in Manhattan.
Broadway below Canal Street in Manhattan.

A bus bulb, also called a bus boarder or bus border, is an arrangement by which a sidewalk is extended outwards for a bus stop; typically the bus bulb replaces roadway that would otherwise be part of a parking lane. With bus bulbs or boarders, a bus can stay in its traffic lane to discharge and pick up passengers, instead of having to pull over to the curb.

The term bus bulb is prevalent in North American usage, whilst bus boarder or bus border is used elsewhere.[1][2][3]

A bus bulb or boader can be considered as a specific form of curb extension, although that term is more normally used to describe a sidewalk extension for the purposes of traffic calming or other traffic management purposes.

[edit] Benefits

Benefits include preventing buses from being delayed by having to pull back into traffic, reducing risk of accidents, reducing pedestrian exposure in crosswalks (if provided at the same location), reducing sidewalk congestion, providing space for bus patron amenities including bus shelters, and traffic calming. The protrusion also facilitates easier full length alignment of a bus entrance with a raised kerb stop, especially to allow level boarding in the case of low-floor buses.[2]

Bus bulbs also retain more parking when compared to a bus stop located in a parking lane, as a bus stop so located requires run-in and run-out tapers. Together these tapers may take up as much space as the actual stop, requiring parking to be prohibited over a longer length of road than with a bulb, where cars can park immediately on either side of the the bus stop itself.[2]

[edit] Drawbacks

Drawbacks include delaying other vehicles that must wait behind the bus, especially on streets that provide only one traffic lane in each direction. The narrowing of the road can also create danger for users like cyclists if the design does not take their needs into account.[2][4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Transit Cooperative Research Program Report 65, Evaluation of Bus Bulbs 1. Transportation Research Board (2001). Retrieved on 2008-04-18.
  2. ^ a b c d Accessible bus stop design guidance 31-36. Transport for London (2006). Retrieved on 2008-04-18.
  3. ^ Buses. Aukland City Council. Retrieved on 2008-04-18.
  4. ^ Transit Cooperative Research Program Report 65, Evaluation of Bus Bulbs 5-22. Transportation Research Board (2001). Retrieved on 2008-04-18.


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